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Driveline and axle seals keep gear oil where it belongs — inside your differential, axle housing, and wheel ends — and off your driveway, brake components, and wheel bearings. This collection covers over 1,600 seals and gaskets across the full axle system: wheel seals (the largest category here), differential pinion seals, drive axle shaft seals, axle housing cover gaskets, spindle seals, and more. Most seals don't have a fixed replacement interval and fail due to age, heat cycling, and mileage — common failure points are the pinion seal after 100,000+ miles and wheel seals on heavy trucks and trailers under sustained load. When buying, match the seal OD, ID, and width exactly; a seal that's off by 2mm won't seat correctly and will leak immediately. For axle housing cover gaskets, OEM-spec cork or rubber-coated steel is preferred over RTV-only solutions on high-load differentials. Always confirm your axle ratio and gear type when ordering differential-specific seals.
Signs you need replacement
- Oil puddle beneath the axle or differential housing. A wet patch of gear oil — thicker and darker than engine oil, often with a sulfur smell — directly below the differential or axle end is the clearest indicator of a failed pinion seal, cover gasket, or axle shaft seal.
- Gear oil on the inboard face of a wheel or tire. Contamination visible on the wheel's inner surface or inside the wheel well points to a failed wheel seal or axle shaft seal allowing differential fluid to migrate outward toward the hub.
- Burning smell or premature wheel bearing failure. When a wheel seal fails, gear oil can contaminate the wheel bearing grease or allow the bearing to run dry — accelerating wear and generating heat. Repeated bearing failures on the same corner are a strong sign the seal was never replaced.
- Differential running low on fluid without an obvious external leak. Slow seepage past a pinion seal or cover gasket may not pool visibly but will show up as low fluid on inspection. Topping off without addressing the seal source leads to gear and bearing damage.
- Visible seal lip cracking, hardening, or missing material. During a brake job, axle service, or differential fluid change, inspect exposed seals directly. A seal lip that's cracked, flattened, or has lost elasticity will leak under load even if it appears dry at rest.
Frequently asked questions
- How often should axle and differential seals be replaced? There's no universal interval — most seals are replaced on-condition, not on a schedule. Pinion seals commonly need attention around 100,000–150,000 miles; wheel seals on commercial trucks and trailers are often inspected every 25,000 miles per manufacturer spec. Always replace seals anytime an axle shaft or differential is disassembled.
- Are aftermarket driveline seals as reliable as OEM? Quality varies significantly. Brands like National (Federal-Mogul), SKF, and Timken manufacture seals to OEM tolerances and are trusted by professional shops. Avoid unbranded or ultra-cheap seals — a $4 pinion seal that fails means pulling the driveshaft again. For high-mileage or heavy-duty applications, OEM or Tier-1 aftermarket is worth the small price difference.
- What else should I replace when servicing a differential pinion seal? Replace the differential fluid at the same time — seal failures often contaminate the oil with moisture or debris. If the pinion seal failed due to a worn or pitted pinion flange, replace the flange too; a damaged mating surface will destroy a new seal quickly. Budget $50–$150 for a typical pinion seal job, more if the flange needs replacement.















































